|
Put him in a crate while you eat,etc or put him outside ,unless you can be watching him until he is broken of this habit.Or at least make your bedroom a dogfree zone.
Is your partner new?Just asking,our dog did this when its fav person,our son ,got engaged and brought his fiancee home,and never any other time. |
my 2 are not allowed anywhere near the bedrooms. Our last oes when she was a puppy always weed on the beds, 2 mattresses and about 4 duvets later she was banned from the bedrooms! |
My first OES did this and I could not understand it at all. Turned out he had a severe urinary tract infection. How else could he tell me but peeing on stuff he normally would not pee on? The vet explained to me that dogs are not spiteful beings. |
They may not be spiteful (uh huh) but they are masters at getting attention. Ours did this for a while - not on the bed thankfully - until we started crating her when we ate, etc. She did learn quickly.
So after getting yours tested for UTI, try the crate. Good luck! |
Mine did this a couple of times on our bed, and LOTS of times on their own dog beds!. We learned afterwards that the breeder had kept the puppies in an area that had blankets on the floor, where they'd "do their business". So they were associating blankets with an appropriate place to pee and poop.
We've lifted all of their dog beds ( I got tired of washing them over and over) and only allow them on our bed with supervision. It acts like a good training activity. We hope that if we do this long enough, they will begin to develop a new association with the bed and bedding, that doesn't involve soiling it. |
Maggie did the same thing but only on the bedspread in our mbdrm in Waynesville house...in the TN house nothing. We only have carpet in the loft of the Waynesville house...everytime we let her up in the loft she pees! Everytime! Same with the bedroom...sooo after paying 50.00 to clean the bedspread we know gate the bedroom off from her and take her into her kennel at night on a leash...otherwise she quickly jumps up on the bed and pees. I am thinking it's because the bedspread has a thick material texture and similar to the carpet...for some reason she thinks carpet is a pee pad...thankfully the rest of the house is hardwood floors and as long as I keep her from the bedroom and loft she has no accidents in the house. My husband thinks it's because Rosie sleeps on the bed and she is in her kennel...but when we go to TN house she just lays on the bed with no problems??? The bedspread there isn't as thick? Who knows what they are thinking. Texture must have something to do with it and she has never gone on the hardwood floors. |
maybe you need to find a woodworker to hand craft you a bedspread!!! (ha ha)
(i tried to put a smiley but just the code shows up....???...) |
No advice to give here, just a comment. When we were teaching Jackson not to jump on people I tried just ignoring her one day when I came home from work. I walked past her and went in my bedroom to change my clothes. Well, she followed me in, jumped on the bed and peed!! My husband had been home with her so chances are she did not have a full bladder, I truly believe that she was mad that I ignored her and peed out of spite. We decided to try other ways to get her to stop jumping and she has never peed on anything in the house since. Moral of the story, I really think that the fluffy folk can be vindictive little suckers!!! |
When we were owned by the maltese/shihtzu,we couldnt ever put a book ,newspaper etc on the floor,the breeder had paper trained her,so if she saw anything on the floor,she peed on it.
(Reminds me of,when my 2 youngest were toddlers and I was toilet training them.,I used to turn the tap on to encourage them to hurry up sometimes,I paid for that,until they were about 4,every time it rained at night,they wet the bed!) |
Quote: I used to turn the tap on to encourage them to hurry up sometimes,I paid for that,until they were about 4,every time it rained at night,they wet the bed!)
Thanks for that story I am in stitches, I only have furkids but that one really tickled my fancy. |
Mim wrote: Quote: I used to turn the tap on to encourage them to hurry up sometimes,I paid for that,until they were about 4,every time it rained at night,they wet the bed!) Thanks for that story I am in stitches, I only have furkids but that one really tickled my fancy. LOL, me too. That is too funny. |
lynZoes wrote: When we were owned by the maltese/shihtzu,we couldnt ever put a book ,newspaper etc on the floor,the breeder had paper trained her,so if she saw anything on the floor,she peed on it.
I took in a dog (Becky) a few years ago when the elderly owner passed away. The elderly woman had taught Becky to use potty pads since she couldn't always get the dog outside. I quickly figured out that Becky thought anything that was light colored, rectangular and on the ground was there for her to pee on. My rugs were never the same... |
donna in despair wrote: :( how can i get my dog to stop peeing on my bed?
Patch did this one time when home alone - fortunately she only got it on the denim comforter and not the mattress. I was at a total loss as why she would do this - she NEVER goes in the house. I was not happy. I have closed the bedroom doors when not home ever since. I had just moved so I thought it could have been the stress of the move. By the way, I took my comforter to the laundry mat and used one of those gigantic washers - a lot cheaper than dry cleaning and it turned out brand new. |
I have a similar problem with my 6 month old chiuahua. She was perfect with the potty traing then @ months ago we got a german shepard puppy that is already potty trained perfect never has accidents but now the chiuahua seems like she's acting out she pees on my side of the bed never my boyfriends or we let them outside she'll poop and pee but come inside and finish. We've tried crating to correct it baby gates nothing seems to get through to her. She's just plan stubborn. HELLLLPPP!!!! |
Didn't find exactly what you're looking for? Search again here:
Custom Search
|
| |
|
|
|